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Focusing on top civilian and military advisors within the national
security establishment, this significant book looks at four case
studies with a focus on civil-military relations within the US
Department of Defense. It investigates whether balanced approaches
produce more effective policies and outcomes than dominating
structures. The culmination of Gibson's treatise is the advancement
of the 'Madisonian approach' to civilian control of the military, a
normative framework designed to replace Samuel Huntington's
'Objective Control' model and also the 'Subjective Control' model,
initially practised by Defense Secretary Robert McNamara and most
recently by Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld. The Madisonian
approach calls for changes in US law and new norms to guide the
interactions of key participants who populate the civil-military
nexus. This book is destined to influence US strategic thinking and
should be added to the syllabus of courses in civil-military
relations, strategic studies and military history. Given the
struggling US policy in Iraq, the time is right for a critical
review of US civil-military relations and this book provides the
departure point for analysis and a potential way forward.
Focusing on top civilian and military advisors within the national
security establishment, this significant book looks at four case
studies with a focus on civil-military relations within the US
Department of Defense. It investigates whether balanced approaches
produce more effective policies and outcomes than dominating
structures. The culmination of Gibson's treatise is the advancement
of the 'Madisonian approach' to civilian control of the military, a
normative framework designed to replace Samuel Huntington's
'Objective Control' model and also the 'Subjective Control' model,
initially practised by Defense Secretary Robert McNamara and most
recently by Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld. The Madisonian
approach calls for changes in US law and new norms to guide the
interactions of key participants who populate the civil-military
nexus. This book is destined to influence US strategic thinking and
should be added to the syllabus of courses in civil-military
relations, strategic studies and military history. Given the
struggling US policy in Iraq, the time is right for a critical
review of US civil-military relations and this book provides the
departure point for analysis and a potential way forward.
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